You paid the agreed settlement, but the recovery calls and messages have not stopped. Here is how to silence them and protect your record this weekend.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
When a loan is settled but recovery calls keep coming, the right paper trail and the RBI Ombudsman can make them stop.
Quick answer
If you have settled or closed the loan, the lender has no right to keep chasing you for it. The first fix is proof: get the settlement letter or No-Dues Certificate (NOC) showing the account is closed for the agreed amount. Once you hold that, every further recovery call or visit is something you can complain about, in writing, with a clear paper trail.
Recovery agents must follow the lender's Fair Practices Code. They cannot call at odd hours, abuse, threaten, or harass you or your family. Log every call, raise a written grievance with the lender's nodal officer, and if it does not stop, escalate to the RBI Ombudsman through the CMS portal. Genuine threats are also a police matter.
This guide is for you if your loan is settled or paid, but the lender or its recovery agents keep contacting you.
Build your proof file. Collect the settlement offer letter, the payment receipt or bank statement showing you paid the settled amount, and the settlement letter or NOC if you have it. Note the loan account number. Start a simple call log: date, time, number that called, who they claimed to be, and what was said. Screenshot any abusive or threatening messages.
Act on both fronts on Saturday.
Put it on record formally. Send the representation in this guide to the lender's grievance or nodal officer, attaching the settlement proof and your call log. Demand the settlement letter or NOC and a written assurance that all recovery contact will stop. Save the complaint reference number and set a reminder to escalate to the RBI Ombudsman if the calls continue or there is no response.
| Document or evidence | Why it matters / where to get it |
|---|---|
| Settlement offer letter from the lender | Shows the agreed one-time amount and that the lender accepted a settlement; the lender issues this before you pay. |
| Payment receipt or bank statement for the settled amount | Proves you actually paid what was agreed; download from net banking or keep the lender's receipt. |
| Settlement letter or No-Dues Certificate (NOC) | Confirms the account is closed for the agreed amount; the strongest proof to stop further demands. Ask the lender if you do not have it. |
| Loan account number | Lets the lender, the Ombudsman and any agent locate the exact account; on your loan papers or app. |
| Call log of recovery contact | Your record of date, time, caller number and what was said; build it yourself as calls come in. |
| Screenshots of abusive or threatening messages | Backs up a harassment complaint; save the original dated SMS, WhatsApp or email. |
| Names or numbers of the agents | Helps the lender trace which agent or agency contacted you; note whatever the caller states. |
| Written grievance you sent | Starts the paper trail; keep the email and any acknowledgement with date and reference number. |
| Step | Who to approach | How to reach them | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Get the settlement letter / NOC | Lender's customer care | Customer-care email or phone, quoting the loan account number | As per the lender's stated turnaround |
| Stop the calls + formal grievance | Lender's grievance / nodal officer | Grievance email or portal listed on the lender's website | Within the lender's stated response time |
| Regulatory complaint | RBI Ombudsman (Integrated Ombudsman Scheme) | RBI CMS portal cms.rbi.org.in or helpline 14448 | After the lender's time limit, as per the scheme |
| Threats, abuse or intimidation | Local police | Nearest police station with your call log and screenshots; emergency number 112 | Right away for genuine threats |
| Abusive digital messages | National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal | cybercrime.gov.in or helpline 1930 | As per the portal |
| If lender is a public/PSU bank | RTI to that bank's Public Information Officer | The bank's RTI/PIO channel or the online RTI portal | Reply due within the RTI timeline |
Adapt the bracketed parts. Keep a copy of everything you send.
Subject: Loan settled - stop recovery calls and issue settlement letter / NOC for loan account [Loan A/c No.]
To, The Grievance / Nodal Officer [Name of bank / NBFC] Subject: Recovery calls continuing after settlement of loan account [Loan A/c No.] - issue settlement letter / NOC and stop all recovery contact Dear Sir/Madam, I had a loan account [Loan A/c No.] with you. As per the settlement offer letter dated [date], I paid the agreed one-time settlement amount of Rs. [amount] on [payment date], through [mode / reference]. Proof of payment is enclosed. Despite the account being settled, your recovery agents continue to call and contact me. Some recent instances: - [date], [time] - from number [number] - [brief note of what was said] - [date], [time] - from number [number] - [brief note of what was said] This contact is causing me distress, and the conduct/timing is contrary to the Fair Practices Code applicable to your recovery agents. I request you to: 1. Issue me the settlement letter / No-Dues Certificate (NOC) for this account immediately, confirming it is closed for the agreed amount. 2. Direct your staff and recovery agents to stop all calls, messages and visits regarding this settled account with immediate effect. 3. Confirm the above to me in writing. Please treat this as a formal grievance and share a complaint reference number. I am maintaining a dated log of every call and message. If this is not resolved within the time allowed, I will approach the RBI Ombudsman through the CMS portal, and report any threats or abuse to the police. Documents enclosed: settlement offer letter, proof of payment, call log. Thank you. [Your full name] [Registered mobile number] [Registered email] [Date]
RTI helps only when the records you want sit with a public authority. For this problem, that means the lender is a public-sector body, or you are seeking records held by a regulator or the police.
RTI does not work against a private bank, NBFC, or a private recovery agency, because they are not public authorities. Most retail loans are with private or non-banking lenders, so RTI is usually the wrong tool to stop recovery calls.
The correct first remedies here are the grievance and complaint routes, not RTI:
No. Once the loan is settled or closed for the agreed amount, the lender has no basis to keep chasing you. Get the settlement letter or No-Dues Certificate as proof, then treat any further recovery call or visit as something you can complain about. Send a written grievance to the lender's nodal officer and escalate to the RBI Ombudsman if it continues.
Keep the settlement offer letter showing the agreed amount, your payment receipt or bank statement for that payment, and above all the settlement letter or No-Dues Certificate confirming the account is closed. If the lender has not issued the settlement letter or NOC, demand it in writing first, because it anchors every complaint you make.
No. Recovery agents must follow the lender's Fair Practices Code. They cannot use abusive language, threaten you or your family, or contact you at odd hours. Log every call and save abusive messages. Raise it with the lender's grievance officer and the RBI Ombudsman. Genuine threats of harm are a police matter - report them to the local police.
Only if your lender is a public-sector bank or government-owned body, since RTI applies to public authorities. Then you can ask its Public Information Officer for the settlement and closure records and the action on your grievance. For a private bank, NBFC or private agency, RTI does not apply - use the grievance route and, if needed, the RBI Ombudsman and the police.
First give the lender a written grievance and its allowed response time. If the calls continue or you are unhappy with the reply, file on the RBI CMS portal at cms.rbi.org.in, or call helpline 14448. Attach your settlement proof, your dated call log, and the lender's response so the Ombudsman can see the full picture.
Not on your credit record. A one-time settlement usually gets reported to the credit bureaus as 'settled', not 'closed', which can make future borrowing harder. A full closure, where you pay the entire outstanding, is reported as 'closed'. Whichever you did, get the matching letter in writing and check your credit report later.
That conduct usually breaches the lender's Fair Practices Code. Note who was contacted, when, and from which number, and add it to your call log. Raise it specifically in your written grievance to the lender's nodal officer as improper conduct by its agents, and cite it again if you escalate to the RBI Ombudsman.
Start with the lender's grievance or nodal officer in writing, and give the response time the RBI Ombudsman scheme allows. If it is not resolved, go to the RBI Ombudsman on cms.rbi.org.in. But if any call involves a real threat of harm or intimidation, go straight to the local police with your call log and screenshots, without waiting.